Since there are pi radians in half a circle, and also 180 degrees in half a circle, you can convert degrees to radians and vice versa with the following proportion:
Also, we are expected to be able to work with revolutions. Recall that 1 revolution = 1 circumference = 360 degrees = 2pi radians.
Since rates are determined by the amount of change divided by time, the following formulas apply:
The Unit CircleFor any point on the unit circle, the x coordinate is the cosine of the central angle, and the y coordinate is the sine of the central angle. The following values should be memorized. Each point (x, y) indicates (cos, sin) of the central angle. (diagram source: The PreCal40S Blog)
Graphs of Trig Functions
Sine and Cosine graphs come in this format: y = a sin (bx) + c where a is the amplitude, b is the frequency (how many complete cycles in 2pi), and c is the vertical shift. The period, or the length of one cycle, can be obtained by .
For example, here is the graph of y = -3 cos (2x) + 4 from -2pi to 2pi, which has a period of pi:
Practice Problems
8. Write an equation for a sinusoidal graph with a minima at 0, a maxima at 4, and a period of pi.
9. What is the range of the function y = -5cosx - 3 ?
10. Find the linear speed in cm/sec and angular speed in radians/sec of a point on the edge of a rotating compact disk that makes 500 revolutions per minute. A standard cd is 12 cm in diameter.
(Solutions Pending)
1 comment:
Ms. Nowak where are the solutions??
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